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When Nelson's grandmother died two years after the great San
Francisco earthquake, his aunt and her husband took in the
14-year-old, who had dropped out of school for the last time. Ten
years his senior, Lillian was genuinely fond of her nephew, and like
her mother, tended to overlook his eccentricities. Family, to her, was
all-important, and up until the end, she stuck by her nephew despite
his heinous crimes.
Earle passed through a series of menial jobs, keeping one until his
strange behavior or laziness made it impossible to keep him on. A one
or two-month stint at a job was a long stretch for the young man,
whose work ethic was severely lacking. He would rarely finish an
assigned task and he often just wandered off a work site, never to
return. Just as he had as a young boy, Earle would often leave home in
work togs only to return later in a completely different set of
clothes. He never outgrew his rough temper and although she loved her
nephew as family, Lillian was clearly afraid of the teen.
"He was just like a child, and we considered him like a child,
and of course, we would never go too far with him, because there was
always the fear of him," Lillian told a newspaper reporter when
news of her ward's arrest for a series of murders reached San
Francisco years later.
As a young man, Nelson once again shared many characteristics with
the subjects of Ressler's study. He was a compulsive masturbator, a
trait held in common with more than 80 percent of those serial killers
interviewed. The only more common trait among the murderers was a
tendency to daydream, something Nelson also did for hours on end. He
reportedly had a voracious sexual appetite, admitting that he began
frequenting the prostitutes near Fisherman's Wharf at the age of 15.
At the same time, Earle Nelson began drinking heavily, often
disappearing for days at a time on alcoholic binges. He spent his
money -- whatever he didn't turn over to his aunt for room and board
-- on the most sensational and lurid literature of the day as his
descent into madness accelerated. Nelson carried on conversations with
invisible friends and enemies, was known to walk around the house on
his hands and increasingly frequently came home battered and bruised,
as if he had been in a fight.
Aunt Lillian, now raising two children of her own, as well as her
mentally ill nephew, had given up trying to discipline the hulking
teen and wavered between wanting Earle just to move out and her
misguided protective nature toward her kin. From his unknown, but
obviously illicit sources of income, Earle was a strong financial
contributor to the household, albeit one whose lifestyle habits were
undoubtedly more trouble than they were worth. Unable to openly
confront her nephew, Lillian acted to protect her children as much as
possible, but prayed for help to solve her familial problem. Earle
took care of the situation on his own.
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